Something is strange here as the density for titanium is about 4.5 and for brass about 8.5, so I would expect a factor of about two for the weight difference.Yes that's two identical ferrules in terms of I.D, O.D and length
Something is strange here as the density for titanium is about 4.5 and for brass about 8.5, so I would expect a factor of about two for the weight difference.Yes that's two identical ferrules in terms of I.D, O.D and length
I have measured it several times. I use a reasonably accurate weight that's meant to measure up to 25g. My wife calls it my "cocaine scale"Something is strange here as the density for titanium is about 4.5 and for brass about 8.5, so I would expect a factor of about two for the weight difference.
Well, I can imagine that one of them would have run 832.imagine the high runs those guys running hundreds of balls with wood 13 mm shafts with long ivory ferrels could have run with a low deflection shaft. and how many racks of 9 ball they would have run when their runs stopped at say ten or more.
That's 6% aluminum and 4% vanadium, which changes the density by less than a percent from the 4.5 of pure titanium. Wikipedia says brass varies some in density according to the copper/zinc ratio but is not lower than 8.4.... I use 6al4v Titanium, not pure titanium, that might explain the difference?
no one alive lol ok Mosconi came to york and got destroyed by a local player until he was warned that wasn’t physically in his best interest to win . I promise you like everyone mosconi lost plenty. he wasn’t a godwe all learned the old way and just shot what works and still does. just didn't learn it from a book or the internet.
and some of us that played more upright dont have back issues, like these young guys are going to get with their grey hair.
and i dont believe anyone alive would be able to beat mosconi in his prime with his upright stance playing on different strange tables
as he did every day. even with his high deflection rambo or balabuska.
all of the pros and great players i knew or met never had i heard a word about having a low deflection shaft.
Yeah but I bet if you could master a perfectly hit center ball break it would be a monster break cue.I put a stainless steel ferrule on a guys break stick back in the 1980's, just to see how it performed. The deflection was more than a foot from head spot to foot spot. What an eye opener.
having all that mass at the end would do little as far increasing the speed/quality of your break shot. ANY deviation from center would also cause you to miss your aim point. probably badly.Yeah but I bet if you could master a perfectly hit center ball break it would be a monster break cue.
Yep - assuming maximum tip offset for Tennesseejoe's shot, it indicates a pivot point about 4" from the tip.having all that mass at the end would do little as far increasing the speed/quality of your break shot. ANY deviation from center would also cause you to miss your aim point. probably badly.